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This is an archive article published on October 14, 2011

Contrite BlackBerry CEOs go into damage-control

The 4-day outage has tarnished RIM's image and set back its drive to catch up with other smartphone rivals.

Research In Motion8217;s co-CEOs have apologised to millions of BlackBerry customers for a four-day outage that has tarnished RIM8217;s image and set back its drive to catch up with Apple and other smartphone rivals.

The system-wide failure,which began on Monday,left tens of millions of frustrated BlackBerry users on five continents without email,instant messaging and browsing.

The executives 8211; Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie 8211; made an unusual joint appearance at a news conference on Thursday in an apparent attempt to contain the fallout from a crisis that came at a particularly inopportune time for the company.

RIM,whose share price has tumbled this year,is already reeling after a series of profit warnings and product missteps.

The service disruption could cost the BlackBerry maker millions of dollars in compensation to customers who lost service. Experts say it could also damage the BlackBerry8217;s reputation for reliability,one of its chief selling points.

8220;We still believe that most of RIM8217;s value is in the network and messaging business and this could crimp that value,8221; Wedbush analyst Scott Sutherland said.

8220;I want to apologize to all the BlackBerry customers we8217;ve let down,8221; Lazaridis said in opening the conference call. 8220;Our inability to quickly fix this has been frustrating.8221;

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The Canadian-based company said it had fixed the root cause of a global disruption in BlackBerry services and was working to clear a huge backlog caused by the outage.

Though there was no independent confirmation of RIM8217;s claims,BlackBerry users around the world said on Thursday afternoon that service appeared to be returning to normal.

The outage 8211; and RIM8217;s sluggish communications with its customers 8211; have fanned rising dissatisfaction with Lazaridis and Balsillie.

Even before the latest outage,critics were seeking a shake-up at RIM,saying the top managers have let the company fall too far behind Apple and other rivals in a rapidly changing market.

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The session was only the second call that RIM has held since the crisis began on Monday,and it was the first in which the chief executives fielded questions from the media.

Public relations specialists have wondered why it took the company so long,saying its response to the crisis has been slow and poorly communicated.

8220;I think a statement of empathy that wouldn8217;t cost anybody anything could have been made within hours,8221; said Allan Bonner,a leading public relations crisis management consultant in Toronto.

8220;They8217;re doing crisis response the way they8217;re designing their software these days 8212; it8217;s outdated,slow and not being well-received by their customers,8221; said Gene Grabowski,senior vice president at Levick Strategic Communications.

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The company did not say for certain whether it would compensate customers. When Balsillie was asked about it,he said: 8220;That is something we are now turning our attention to and that is something that we plan to come back to these customers on very,very soon.8221;

Spain8217;s Telefonica and other network providers have already said they would compensate customers over the lost service,and analysts expects operators to seek to recoup those losses from RIM.

If RIM were to pay back all affected carriers and customers it could knock between 3 and 5 cents off earnings per share in the quarter ending in late November,according to BMO Capital Markets analyst Tim Long. That would amount to a reduction in profit of between 15 million and 26 million.

ONE MORE OBSTACLE

The outage puts one more obstacle in the path of the Canadian smartphone maker as it looks to reverse a festering loss of market share in the United States that many analysts fear will spread to RIM8217;s growth markets overseas.

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RIM released a batch of updated touchscreen phones in August as a holding measure until a major launch next year of a line of BlackBerry smartphones operated by the software that now powers its PlayBook tablet.

The transition is considered crucial to its turnaround efforts and its best hope of catching up with Apple8217;s iPhone and devices powered by Google8217;s Android.

On Thursday,the shares had slipped 1.1 percent to 23.60 by mid-afternoon on the Nasdaq. The stock has lost two-thirds of its value since a peak near 70 in February.

MALFUNCTION

The service disruption both highlights the special features offered by BlackBerry in terms of security and at the same time shows it is vulnerable to massive failures.

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RIM is unique among handset makers,as it compresses and encrypts data in its own system before pushing it to BlackBerry devices via carrier networks. Apple and others rely on carrier networks to handle all routing and delivery of content.

RIM said it had determined that the outage 8211; the most extensive in the company8217;s history 8211; was caused by a malfunctioning switch at a data center in Slough,England,and the subsequent failure of a backup to operate properly.

That triggered a massive reservoir of data that jammed up other data centers,spreading the disruption to most regions.

Lazaridis said it would take some time to pinpoint why the switch and back-up both failed,setting off the crisis.

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Michael Howard,a principal analyst with Infonetics,a networking equipment market research firm,said the outage indicates RIM needs to expand the capacity of its network.

8220;Anybody who knows how to build backup builds resilient data centers and resilient networks,8221; he said. 8220;I8217;m sure they are going to change the way they store and change their data.8221;

Still,RIM is hoping consumers hooked on its proprietary instant messaging system and executives who rely on its secure email service forget the latest hiccup.

Marie,a 28-year old Canadian BlackBerry user who did not want to give her surname,said RIM8217;s problems were of little concern as she eyed the various BlackBerry handsets on display at the Gitex Shopper in Dubai,which claims to be the Middle East8217;s largest electronics fair.

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8220;They can get it fixed 8211; everything that has technology has its flaws 8211; it8217;s not the end of the world,8221; she said.

 

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